‘Making a Positive Environmental Impact’: Exploring the Role of Volunteering at a Campus Community Garden
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Campus Community Gardens and Student Motivations
1.2. Benefits and Challenges of Participation in a Campus Community Garden
1.3. Promoting Students’ Pro-Environmental Behaviors
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Collection Procedures
2.2. Sample
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Diagram of Themes and Subthemes (See Figure 1)
3.2. Theme One: Volunteer Motivations
3.2.1. Academic Requirements and Personal Interests
3.2.2. Pre-Existing Interest in Nature and Gardening
3.2.3. Childhood Exposure to Gardening
“I think it’s a little difficult for me to sometimes communicate with my grandparents because they don’t speak a lot of English and my Mandarin is not very good, and so it’s hard to connect over something. And I think gardening was one of those things that my grandpa and I really got along with—we’re really both interested in. And I guess it just gives us opportunities to connect as well”.
3.3. Theme Two: Maintaining Students’ Engagement
3.3.1. Building Connections and Community
“My favorite part is always interacting with the other students that are volunteering…it makes more community inside the community garden [as you are] not only cultivating plants…but also cultivating relationships and networking. And I think that’s just inherently valuable”.
“I think the most important thing [I learned], honestly, was just not feeling weird to introduce myself first…sometimes it feels really awkward when you’re in a situation and no one is really speaking or introducing themselves. But in the garden, that’s something I’ve had to do multiple times. And so, it’s just something that is easier and it’s kind of nice to know that I am able to facilitate conversations now”.
“I think my favorite aspect of volunteering at the garden is getting to connect with the plants. So, the garden is trying to [have us] build relationships with our plants and our greenery, which is what our ancestors did. And so, taking the time to really sit with plants, using your five senses, smelling or touching, tasting if it’s safe to eat and using your eyes just to really observe a plant for more than its face value. And so, it’s time for you to really inspect or investigate a plant and find new things about the plants that you didn’t know before”.
3.3.2. Being in Nature
“I think a benefit would be going into a serene and relaxing environment. I feel like when I am surrounded by plants, I feel more relaxed, especially with finals and stuff. So going into a calmer environment I feel is very beneficial to my mental health. I feel like before I started work or before I started volunteering there—I was really stressed out just because of school and stuff. But then I noticed that I started to calm down more when I started volunteering there”.
3.3.3. Volunteer Challenges
“I don’t enjoy turning compost. I don’t think anyone really does. It’s crazy how hot the compost could get…there’s a lot of science in it. But yeah, it can literally start steaming. It’s really hot. It doesn’t smell great. It’s definitely not my favorite part, but I don’t mind doing it. You know, it’s also a lot of work shoveling and stuff like that, but really it’s not too bad”.
3.4. Theme Three: Promoting Pro-Environmental Behaviors Through Volunteerism
3.4.1. Making a Positive Environmental Contribution
“At the end of the day, it’s like after you finish volunteering and you see the result, you’re very motivated and you can see what you did physically, not just academically. So, you have a result. And then even when time passes, if you planted a plant, you can go back to it, even harvest it, which is the best”.
“I found it really interesting to see all of the hard work from planting seeds to watching it grow and watering it to being able to harvest fruits and vegetables. And in the end, it was really rewarding to be able to harvest as well as share the produce with the campus community at the food pantry”.
“…you get to help your community [with clean-up, reducing food waste, and being more resourceful], even if it’s in a small way… [I found] small things, even if they don’t seem like a big difference, like small things such as being more resourceful, everything matters”.
3.4.2. Engaging in Environmental Awareness and Activism
“[I learned] how composting works, when fruits and vegetables are in season, and some other stuff about plants in general. How sunflowers are spicy so that animals don’t eat them before they’re completely ripe and have germinated. I thought that was cool. So just general plant facts and how to apply the stuff you learn in the garden at home”.
“I think the most important thing I’ve learned is…that a lot of food is grown through hard work and there are a lot of people out there that have their livelihoods depending on that hard work…We spent a month trying to support fava farmers that are not very attended to—by trying to instate some form of school legislation just to support more community garden efforts…And then we were also trying to promote it on our own social media platforms to say these farmers are in need of support and they should be more valued because we get what they produce and we don’t really see how they produce it”.
3.4.3. Adopting Lifestyle Changes
“They do compost—helping reduce food waste. Obviously not everybody composts, but knowing that there are people out there that do it, it also influenced me to start bringing in my own food scraps and trying to reduce my own food waste. I feel like seeing the compost puts waste into perspective for me, knowing before I started working in the garden, my food scraps just go in the trash can and that just goes into the landfill. And now knowing it’s getting put back into earth by becoming soil, I feel like that’s a huge thing that they’re doing environmentally”.
“I feel like I go to the garden, and it helps me become a lot more conscious of environmental things…So have you ever seen that chart where it has how much water usage for different types of food? I think it was titled “How Thirsty Is Our Food”. I just briefly remember someone in the garden bringing it up, and it basically has liters of water required to produce one kilogram of the following food products. I don’t know, that was kind of an eye opener for me because Bovine meat is at the very, very top, with over 15,000 L of water required per kilogram followed by nuts and whatever else. And that kind of encouraged me to not eat as much beef or meat in general”.
“It’s definitely influenced me to want to have something like that when I have my own house or yard to be able to grow my own food that’s not from a grocery store and I can make sure it’s safe and everything. And I just think it’s pretty sustainable to have your own garden that’s clean and you don’t have to worry about extra expenses or food waste, because then you could just compost it. I think gardening is a really important thing and it’s definitely a hobby that you can have throughout your entire life”.
3.4.4. Application to Future Careers
“… [the compost] it kind of helped me realize that I’m really interested in waste diversion and wanting to reduce the amount of waste that goes into landfills on a bigger scale, on a scale of a whole city or a whole county or a whole state. And so, I think that’s kind of one of my ideal career paths would be to work with municipalities to help them figure out a system to collect food waste so that it can be composted and then that compost can be used to fertilize plants in the surrounding areas”.
4. Discussion
4.1. Motivations
4.2. Sustained Engagement
4.3. Campus Community Gardens as Sites for Promoting Pro-Environmental Behaviors
4.4. Limitations and Future Directions
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviation
CCG | Campus community garden |
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Category | Frequency | |
---|---|---|
n | % | |
Gender | ||
Female | 20 | 80% |
Male | 3 | 12% |
Non-Binary | 2 | 8% |
Race/Ethnicity | ||
Asian American | 13 | 52% |
White | 6 | 24% |
Latinx/Hispanic | 4 | 16% |
Mixed-race | 2 | 8% |
Year in School | ||
Fourth Year+ | 18 | 72% |
Third Year | 3 | 12% |
Second Year | 4 | 16% |
First Year | 0 | 0% |
On/Off Campus | ||
On Campus | 5 | 20% |
Off Campus | 20 | 80% |
Hours Volunteered | ||
9+ | 10 | 40% |
6–9 | 5 | 20% |
3–6 | 4 | 16% |
<3 | 6 | 24% |
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Izenstark, D.; Boone, B.A. ‘Making a Positive Environmental Impact’: Exploring the Role of Volunteering at a Campus Community Garden. Sustainability 2025, 17, 4951. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17114951
Izenstark D, Boone BA. ‘Making a Positive Environmental Impact’: Exploring the Role of Volunteering at a Campus Community Garden. Sustainability. 2025; 17(11):4951. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17114951
Chicago/Turabian StyleIzenstark, Dina, and Barbara Ann Boone. 2025. "‘Making a Positive Environmental Impact’: Exploring the Role of Volunteering at a Campus Community Garden" Sustainability 17, no. 11: 4951. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17114951
APA StyleIzenstark, D., & Boone, B. A. (2025). ‘Making a Positive Environmental Impact’: Exploring the Role of Volunteering at a Campus Community Garden. Sustainability, 17(11), 4951. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17114951